Preferred Blue Accounts

Healthcare Reform

Baby Yourself®

Baby Yourself® Maternity Program helps ensure expectant mothers and their babies receive the best possible heath care during pregnancy. This program is available to expectant mothers, regardless of whether or not their pregnancy is normal or high risk.

Walking Works

WalkingWorks is a program designed to help people get active. People of any fitness level - from beginner to advanced - can benefit from walking. WalkingWorks encourages participants to improve their health by incorporating walking into their daily routine.

Preferred Blue Accounts

Healthcare Reform

Baby Yourself®

Baby Yourself® Maternity Program helps ensure expectant mothers and their babies receive the best possible heath care during pregnancy. This program is available to expectant mothers, regardless of whether or not their pregnancy is normal or high risk.

Walking Works

WalkingWorks is a program designed to help people get active. People of any fitness level - from beginner to advanced - can benefit from walking. WalkingWorks encourages participants to improve their health by incorporating walking into their daily routine.

(NEW YORK) -- Sleeping together doesn't have such a sexual connotation when you're talking about how couples actually fall asleep in bed.

University of Hertfordshire psychologist Professor Richard Wiseman wanted to find out about the most popular sleep positions so he interviewed 1,000 people and learned that a whopping 42 percent sleep with their backs to each other.

Meanwhile, 31 percent said they slept facing in the same direction while just 4 percent sleep face-to-face.

Wiseman also investigated how the strength of a couple's relationship also affected sleep habits. For instance, 94 percent who said they touched each other during sleep reported being happy in their relationship while just 68 percent of non-touchers said the same thing.

The physical distance between sleepers also seemed to indicate how figuratively close they were to each other.

For example, 66 percent of people who slept 30 inches or more apart said they were happy with their relationship while 86 percent of folks who were less than an inch apart reported being satisfied with their significant other.

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